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Franklin House (Launceston)

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Type
  
Public

Completed
  
1838

Phone
  
+61 3 6344 6233

Owner
  
National trust

Town or city
  
Youngtown, Tasmania

Opened
  
1838

Architectural style
  
Georgian architecture

Franklin House (Launceston)

Material
  
Stone, Australian red cedar

Address
  
Hobart Rd, Youngtown TAS 7249, Australia

Similar
  
Tamar Island Wetlands, National Automobile Museum, City Park - Launceston, Queen Victoria Museum, Country Club Casino

Franklin House in Launceston Tasmania, is a historic house that is preserved by Australia's National Trust and is open to the public. Built in 1838 for Britton Jones, it later became a school for boys.

Contents

History

It is a Georgian style house that was built in 1838 for former convict Britton Jones, a Launceston brewer and innkeeper.

It was later a school for boys, between 1842-1866 when leased to schoolmaster William Keeler Hawkes. The house and gardens are located in Youngtown, Tasmania, and are available to public tours.

In 1960 Franklin house was the first heritage property taken over by the National Trust in Tasmania.

Review of haunting claims

In early 2013 the Tas Ghost Hunting society undertook an investigation into possible paranormal activity after staff members reported unusual experiences while working there. They visited twice and set up equipment in a number of rooms. In a sitting room they reportedly found higher levels of energy than normal using an electromagnetic sensor. In an upstairs bedroom they asked several times the question "'What is your name?'" Mr. Hull a member of the Tas Ghost Hunting society said "'It came back with the answer, Will'".

In response, members of the Launceston Skeptics group have challenged the Tas Ghost Hunting society's results by saying "'It has to be good, if it's an extraordinary claim, that is that there are ghosts there it needs very solid evidence'". According to skeptic member Jin-Oh Choi '"We want to make sure the way they're recording the information is actually correct.'"

According to investigator Benjamin Radford most ghost hunting groups... make many methodological mistakes.... In his article for Skeptical Inquirer Magazine Radford concludes that ghost hunters should care about doing a truly scientific investigation "I believe that if ghosts exist, they are important and deserve to be taken seriously. Most of the efforts to investigate ghosts so far have been badly flawed and unscientific --- and, not surprisingly, fruitless."

References

Franklin House (Launceston) Wikipedia


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